From: jon+usenet@unequivocal.eu
On 2025-08-01, The Todal wrote:
> On 01/08/2025 21:06, Jon Ribbens wrote:
>> On 2025-08-01, The Todal wrote:
>>> On 01/08/2025 10:51, Martin Harran wrote:
>>>> We take regular senior breaks in hotels around the country. I always
>>>> pick one with a leisure centre as swimming combined with a steam room
>>>> or sauna is my main form of exercise and relaxation. I have noticed an
>>>> increasing trend for such leisure centres to have no drinking water
>>>> available to iuers, either by fountain or bottled. Hydration is of
>>>> major importance after a steam room or sauna and I wonder if these
>>>> hotels are infringing Health and Safety rules and risking a negligence
>>>> charge if an inexperienced user ended up being dehydrated?
>>>
>>> In hotels, don't they still provide a kettle, a teapot and some teabags?
>>> And a tap from which you can fill the kettle? Or is that only for the
>>> cheap old fashioned hotels?
>>
>> Al Murray has a long-running "Sink vs Kettle" competition on his xitter
>> account to determine, in the many hotel rooms in which he has stayed,
>> whether the size and shape of the sink actually makes it possible to
>> fit the kettle under the tap to fill it. Pretty often, the sink wins.
>
> I don't think hotel mini-bars are as common as they used to be. Maybe
> it's more trouble than it's worth to have someone inspect the mini
> fridge and see what drinks are missing and do the calculation and
> replace the items for the next guest.
When they do exist, and I agree they seem to be rare these days,
they seem tend to have electronic sensors that automatically detect
if you have taken, or merely looked at, any of the drinks.
--- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
* Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)
|